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・ Malcolm Ferguson-Smith
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・ Malcolm Fleming, 3rd Lord Fleming
・ Malcolm Fleming, Earl of Wigtown
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Malcolm Fraser
・ Malcolm Fraser (architect)
・ Malcolm Fraser (artist)
・ Malcolm Fraser (disambiguation)
・ Malcolm Fraser (philanthropist)
・ Malcolm Fraser (surveyor)
・ Malcolm Fridlund
・ Malcolm Garrett
・ Malcolm Geddes
・ Malcolm Geoffrey Hilson
・ Malcolm George Baker
・ Malcolm Gets
・ Malcolm Gibbon
・ Malcolm Gill
・ Malcolm Gillies


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Malcolm Fraser : ウィキペディア英語版
Malcolm Fraser

John Malcolm Fraser (; 21 May 1930 – 20 March 2015) was an Australian politician who was the 22nd Prime Minister of Australia and the Leader of the Liberal Party from 1975 to 1983.
Elected to the Australian Parliament seat of Wannon in 1955 at the age of 25, Fraser was appointed to the Cabinet in 1966. After rising to become Minister for Defence in 1969, he was regarded as a contender for the leadership of the Liberal Party following their defeat in 1972, but he lost that contest to Billy Snedden. Fraser challenged Snedden in 1975 and was elected Leader of the Liberal Party, becoming the Leader of the Opposition.
Fraser was appointed as caretaker prime minister on 11 November 1975 by the Governor-General of Australia, Sir John Kerr, following the controversial dismissal of the Whitlam Government in which he played a key role. He went on to win the largest parliamentary majority as a proportion of seats in Australian political history at the subsequent election. After two further election victories in 1977 and 1980, he was defeated by the Bob Hawke-led Australian Labor Party in 1983 and left parliament shortly after.
Fraser was the last Liberal Party Prime Minister to practise Keynesian economics. In retirement, Fraser became involved in international relief and humanitarian aid issues and, domestically, as a forthright liberal voice for human rights. Shortly after Tony Abbott won the 2009 Liberal Party leadership spill, Fraser ended his Liberal Party membership, stating the party was "no longer a liberal party but a conservative party".
On 20 March 2015, Fraser died at the age of 84 after a brief illness.
==Early life and education==

John Malcolm Fraser was born on 21 May 1930 in Toorak, Victoria, to a family with a history of involvement in politics and the pastoral industry. His grandfather, Simon Fraser, Sr., emigrated from Nova Scotia in 1853, becoming a successful pastoralist and speculator, and later a member of the Victorian Parliament, the Federation Conventions and the Australian Senate. Fraser's uncle, Simon Fraser, Jr., was a noted sportsman who rowed for Australia at the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm, and also played Australian rules football for Essendon and University in the Victorian Football League.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Prime Ministers of Australia: Malcolm Fraser )
Fraser's father, John Neville Fraser, had been educated at the University of Melbourne, and was a pastoralist at Moulamein in the western Riverina region of New South Wales, and later at a property called "Nareen Station" in Nareen, near Hamilton in the Western District of Victoria.〔(Australian Biography profile of Malcolm Fraser ), part 10, 14 April 1994〕 Fraser's mother, Una Woolf, was of Jewish descent on her father's side,〔 which Fraser did not discover until he was an adult.
Fraser grew up on the family's pastoral properties and was educated at Tudor House School, near Moss Vale in New South Wales, Glamorgan, now part of Geelong Grammar School, and Melbourne Grammar School, before completing a degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Magdalen College, Oxford in 1952.〔 While at Oxford, Fraser was a classmate and friend of future Canadian Prime Minister John Turner.

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